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Showing posts with label poisons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poisons. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 2, 2022

AN INTERVIEW WITH DR. JOSEPHINE REVA FROM MYSTERY AUTHOR L.M. JORDEN'S DR. JOSEPHINE PLANTAE PARADOXES SERIES

An interview with Josephine Reva, M.D. from the Dr. Josephine Plantae Paradoxes Series by L.M. Jorden. 

What was your life like before your author started pulling your strings?

Not many people knew about the life of a homeopathic doctor in the early 20th century. It was gory, messy and physically demanding. Most people thought a woman couldn’t handle it, and that we should go back to the kitchen. I was the first Lady Doctor in areas of Brooklyn, and I was very busy. I treated everything from broken bones to tuberculous, delivered babies and performed surgeries, sometimes all in a single day! We doctors also made house calls — does anyone remember those? 

 

What’s the one trait you like most about yourself?

As a Homeopath MD, I have to be inquisitive and investigate a patient's overall health and state of mind, not only specific symptoms. I ask a lot of questions. This trained me to be a good detective.

 

What do you like least about yourself?

As a scientist and doctor, I don't take risks. I need to be professional to save lives. But when I become my alter ego, a jazz age flapper or opera star, I become sexy and adventurous.

 

What is the strangest thing your author has had you do or had happen to you?

The author keeps putting me under the covers with an amorous suitor, and he's sometimes even the murder suspect! Things do get steamy.

 

In Aconite, Queen of Poisons, I flirt with the tall blue-eyed chief detective who imprisons me, a debonair but villainous, brown-eyed suspect who dances up a storm at the speakeasy, and my black-eyed gorgeous hunk of a chauffeur. Hmmm, which one would you choose? 

 

Each new book takes place in a later decade, and I live a very long life, into my 90’s, with many lovers. I’m looking forward to that!

 

Do you argue with your author? If so, what do you argue about?

Whether to include passionate sex scenes! It’s a normal bodily function, and hormonally therapeutic for the endocrine system.

 

What is your greatest fear?

That I can't stop a killer using poison botanicals. in Belladonna, book 2, the world is in danger, so I have to act fast before war starts. Poison flowers should be used by trained homeopaths only — to cure people, not kill them!

 

What makes you happy?

Reading medical journals and experimenting in my lab. Science was full of new discoveries during my lifetime. 

 

If you could rewrite a part of your story, what would it be? Why?

I'd rewrite how some men gave us women doctors a hard time and were very condescending. They ridiculed us. But I think the author captures this truthfully. In fact, I'd say from my own experience, it was far worse. I’d march more for equality.

 

Of the other characters in your book, which one bugs you the most? Why?

My fellow students from med school who teased me when I was the only female in class. They’re called the Yorkvillains, named after the Yorkville area where our school was. They’re naughty and also comedians, like the Marx Brothers.

 

Of the other characters in your book, which one would you love to trade places with? Why?

My patients Maria and Sophie. They’re strong women, and they are married and traditional — very different from me. They love to dress up and put on the Ritz, and encourage me to find romance, too. But can a trailblazing early woman doctor have it all — love and a career?

 

Tell us a little something about your author. Where can readers find her website/blog?

L.M. Jorden is an award-winning journalist, author, and former professor who has lived on three continents. When not tending her garden, she writes on comparative societies for healthcare, human rights, and the environment. She holds a Master of Science from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and studied medicinal botany.

The Dr. Josephine Plantae Paradoxes is her debut mystery series. You can find L.M. on Facebook and her author page on Amazon.


What's next for you?

My new book in the series. BELLADONNA, Murder at the Opera, is set in the Golden Age 1930’s. Dr. Josephine and her beau are at the Brooklyn Opera when a diva is horribly murdered onstage. Josephine must go undercover as an ensemble singer to discover the links between the opera stars and a Brooklyn fascist group.  She and the gang set sail for Italy to try and stop a sinister international plot involving love, politics and poisons. All aboard on the high seas for a new madcap mystery!

 

Aconite, Queen of Poisons

A Dr. Josephine Plantae Paradoxes Series, Book 1

 

A Madcap Murder Mystery -  Based on a True Life Story

Booze Blanks? Lady Doctors? Poison Cures? Murder!

 

It’s the Roaring 20’s New York, and a feisty orphan rises from the Little Italy slums to become a doctor. Josephine Reva, M.D. is a trailblazing woman on a mission -- she's seeking equality in a male-dominated profession. When no Manhattan hospitals will hire a female physician, she puts out her shingle in faraway Brooklyn as the area’s first “Lady Doctor.”

 

Prohibition forbids drinking, but doctors can prescribe “medicinal” booze. Not surprisingly, Josephine’s patients flock to her, but bootleggers put her on their radar.

 

When an unexpected invitation arrives to join her peers at a conference, Josephine is surprised. Medicine is at a crossroads -- should she choose Allopathy or Homeopathy? Will Josephine renounce her paradoxical homeopathic “poison cures”?

 

Murder intrudes when a fellow doctor is found dead at the docks from Aconite, a purple flower known as the “Queen of Poisons.” But Aconite is also a homeopathic remedy, and Josephine realizes she’s being framed.

 

Chief Detective John O’Malley is a hard-boiled cop who believes poison is a “woman's weapon.” Josephine has no alibi. The two begin a cat and mouse chase along the killer’s trail, meeting some well-known New Yorkers, as the bodies pile up.

 

With help from her patients, Josephine goes undercover as her alter-ego — a sexy Jazz Age flapper — to a speakeasy to spy on suspicious doctors, quacks, and bootleggers. Pulling Josephine out of trouble is Dominick, her brawny and handsome chauffeur with a mysterious World War past.

 

Complications arise when Josephine falls for a debonair suspect. Is he friend or foe? Is the budding romance about to get nipped in the bud?

 

Can Josephine unmask the murderer? Can she unravel her own secrets to follow her heart and her ambition?

 

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

HEALTHY LIVING WITH JANICE - CSI LISA BLACK

Normally when health editor Janice Kerr discusses health issues here on Wednesdays, it’s in the context of staying healthy. Today we have a guest with a slightly different agenda. Lisa Black is a full time latent print examiner and CSI for a police department in Florida. Her fourth book Defensive Wounds was released by Harper Collins on September 27. In it, forensic scientist Theresa MacLean battles a serial killer operating at an attorney’s convention. Read more about Lisa and her books at her website. 


Lisa is also offering a copy of Trail of Blood to one of our readers. To enter the drawing, just post a comment to the blog this week. And be sure to include your email address or check back on Sunday to see if you've won. We have no way of contacting winners if you don't, and we've had a lot of books go unclaimed lately. -- AP

Mystery Writers and the Search for an Undetectable Poison

If there were such a thing as a truly undetectable poison, mystery writers would use it in every book. There are, however, poisons that stand a good chance of not being detected. Whether or not your killer is willing to take the chance is, of course, up to them.

The average autopsy will check for alcohol, narcotics and illegal drugs. That’s all. The average crime lab will not have the equipment or reagents to check for every possible poison. The investigator would have to know what they are looking for. If they do, and there is not currently a way to detect it, a way might then be found. That’s what happened in Toledo when David Davis supposedly killed his wife Shannon with succinylcholine, which instantly breaks down into succinic acid and choline. These two chemicals are normally found in the body anyway. At the time there was no way to detect suspicious levels, but doctors in Sweden and then a doctor at the Medical College of Ohio came up with a test to do so. Davis was convicted (after going on the run for seven years,) but using a brand-new technique in a criminal trial is always a risky proposition, and the accuracy of it is still under debate. Juries—and everyone else—like their forensic science to have lots of studies and decades of time behind it before they vote to convict.

If you want to know how to kill someone without leaving a physical mark or trace, read my book Evidence of Murder. That’s exactly the question my heroine, Theresa, comes up against, and yes, there is an answer, and yes, it’s completely true. But it’s not poison.

Well, maybe not exactly.

The trick is to make the poison fit so perfectly into the victim’s situation that, even if found, it will not necessarily scream murder. Genene Ann Jones killed numerous infants in her pediatric ICU unit by overdosing them with the blood thinner heparin. But with the victims in such a fragile state to begin with, her activities went undetected for quite some time.

Dr. John Hill supposedly killed his wife by poisoning pastries with bacteria so that her death would look like a case of meningitis. It might have worked had his behavior not raised so much suspicion. This method would require a good working knowledge of, and access to, bacteria and runs great risk of not working or not working completely. On the plus side, it wouldn’t look like poison, and one could always try again.

But just because a poison is well known doesn’t mean you can’t get away with it. An older lady killing off her husband is the first thing you think of with the word arsenic, but Audrey Marie Hilley did exactly that, while her husband was in the hospital under the care of an army of competent doctors and nurses.

Thanks, Lisa. I hope you haven’t given any of our non-author readers any ideas! Readers, want to win a copy of Trail of Blood? Post a comment to enter the drawing, and as I mentioned above, don't forget to either include your contact info or check back on Sunday. If you win, and we can't contact you, you lose out. -- AP